Main menu

Jeff Gordon wins rain-shortened race to get back into Chase picture

2 of 2Hendrick Racing gave winner Jeff Gordon plenty of support on Sunday at Pocono.

Photo by LAT PHOTOGRAPHIC

Jeff Gordon, one of NASCAR racing's biggest rainmakers, got a shower just when he needed it in Sunday's Pennsylvania 400.

Gordon didn't lead a lap under the green flag, but he notched a critically important victory at Pocono Raceway after an opportunistic move to the front after a restart on lap 91 of a scheduled 160.

Coincidentally, it was a mistake by Jimmie Johnson, Gordon's Hendrick Motorsports teammate, that enabled Gordon to celebrate in Victory Lane, and, more important, to resurrect his prospects for the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup.

The victory was Gordon's first of the season and the 86th of his career. It was his sixth win at Pocono and the second there in a rain-shortened race. Gordon took the checkered flag after 106 laps when rain halted the June 2007 event at the 2.5-mile triangular track.

On Sunday, NASCAR parked the cars on lap 98, after they ran seven laps under caution as rain moved into the area. When what started as a light rain became torrential, NASCAR called the race.

Gordon surged into the lead when Johnson got loose in turn one on lap 91 and knocked Matt Kenseth's Ford into the outside wall. Gordon, who had restarted sixth, saw an opening, dodged a handful of cars wrecking around him and took the lead.

"I've never seen the seas part like that," said Gordon, who moved to 13th in the series standings and the second wild-card position for the Chase. "I got a great restart and was able to dive to the inside in front of Kasey [Kahne] and I saw the No. 48 [Jimmie Johnson] get sideways and it just took them all out. And I was like, wow. And then I was thinking about the restart and what we were going to do. I didn't want to have the same thing happen to us that happened to the No. 48.

"And it started raining. I tell you what, with all the things that have gone wrong for us this year, I'm hoping that this is the one that makes up for it all.”

Kasey Kahne finished second, followed by Martin Truex Jr., Brad Keselowski and Tony Stewart. Despite a broken transmission, Dale Earnhardt Jr. came home 32nd and kept his lead in the standings by five points over Kenseth, six over Greg Biffle and eight over Johnson.